• 19,742
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Featured Child

Aurelia, 14, of New Mexico is a wonderful teen with a simple goal in life - to be happy and part of a forever family. She has a positive attitude and a fondness for group activities.


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Featured Siblings

Lillian, 15, Devin, 13, and Regina, 8, of Kansas need a loving and nurturing family. Lillian and Regina enjoy reading and art while Devin enjoys being outdoors and putting things together.


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Caseworker of the Month

Deborah Motley, a post adoption case manager with Lutheran Services Florida in Port Charlotte is our January Caseworker of the Month.


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Who Is AdoptUSKids?

  News and Announcements

Posted 2 days ago 2/21/2013

How to Use Customer Service Concepts to Enhance Recruitment and Retention of Foster, Adoptive, and Kinship Families

Through our work with States, Tribes, and Territories, we have been on a journey to help public child welfare systems improve retention, engagement, and satisfaction levels of their foster, adoptive, and kinship families. Our new publication, Using Customer Service Concepts to Enhance Recruitment and Retention Practices (PDF – 852 KB), from the National Resource Center for Diligent Recruitment at AdoptUSKids has evolved because of this journey. It integrates and adapts lessons learned about good customer service from world-class leaders in business, child welfare, and the ongoing work of AdoptUSKids as it relates to the challenging and often stressful responsibilities of the child welfare system.

Posted 2 days ago 2/21/2013

New Book on Adopting from Foster Care by Writer and Actress Nia Vardalos

Writer and star of My Big Fat Greek Wedding, Nia Vardalos firmly believed she was supposed to be a mom, but Mother Nature and modern medicine had put her in a headlock. So she made a choice that shocked friends, family, and even herself: with only fourteen hours’ notice, she adopted a preschooler. With her signature wit and candor, she describes her and husband Ian Gomez’s bumpy road to parenting in her new book Instant Mom.

Posted 2 days ago 2/21/2013

Effective Strategies to Overcome Barriers to Interjurisdictional Placements

Various jurisdictional boundaries separate child welfare systems—cities, counties, boroughs, States, Tribes, Territories, and countries—and those boundaries can represent significant barriers in finding families for waiting children. Child welfare professionals, however, have the potential to facilitate the timely movement of children and youth across these jurisdictions to achieve what every child and youth need and deserve: a permanent family. Our new publication, Key Elements and Strategies for Effective Interjurisdictional Work (PDF – 2.2MB), from the National Resource Center for Diligent Recruitment at AdoptUSKids highlights how child welfare agencies can work with others involved in the child welfare system such as court systems, judges, and Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASAs) to make interjurisdictional placements possible.

Posted 2/5/2013

Deborah Motley Named AdoptUSKids' January Caseworker of the Month

Debora Motley, a post adoption case manager with Lutheran Services Florida in Port Charlotte, is our January Caseworker of the Month. Motley was able to retain a family ready to quit the adoption process by engaging them on a personal level while comporting herself as a professional.

National Campaign

 

You don't have to be perfect to be a perfect parent

Learn about the award-winning national recruitment campaign produced through a partnership of the U.S. Children's Bureau, Ad Council, and AdoptUSKids.

More about the campaign

 
Join the conversation in AdoptUSKids online communities to connect and share with other families and child welfare professionals.